When Rob Karwath belatedly applied for the top job at Minnesota's Duluth News Tribune, he discovered that even the news business sometimes rewards latecomers.

Karwath, 40, the Chicago Tribune's associate managing editor for business coverage, vaulted to the front of a pack of nearly 200 applicants for the executive editor position at the News Tribune, a Knight Ridder paper with a daily circulation of 46,182.

"I think having someone of Rob's caliber will mean nothing but good things for Duluth," says News Tribune Publisher Marti Buscaglia. "He is somebody with [a] business background and very strong journalistic integrity and principles, and I think that combination is absolutely what's needed in today's newsrooms."

While hiring Karwath was an easy decision for Buscaglia, it was more difficult for Karwath to bid farewell to the Chicago Tribune, where he started as a summer intern in college and stayed for 19 years. But the News Tribune's ability to provide the town with information that "knits the community together" grabbed his attention. "You measure a newspaper based on the impact that it has," he says. "The paper is aggressive; it's ambitious, and it's doing the right things."

The location also appealed to Karwath. Although his journalism career flourished in Chicago, much of his childhood was spent about 80 miles east of Duluth on the shores of Lake Superior, where his family has vacationed for more than 60 years. He has spent winter and summer holidays there, learning to ski and enjoying the outdoors. He had dreamed not only of leading a newspaper but also of living near the lake year-round with his family. "The prospect of getting to live both my dreams at once is kind of amazing," he says.

Andrea Novel Buck, the News Tribune's managing editor, says her paper is focusing on providing more local news to increase readership. Karwath's business acumen, she says, "will help to grow circulation" and attract new groups of readers to the paper. "He has the long-term vision and experience to make those things happen."

Those sentiments are echoed by Chicago Tribune Managing Editor James O'Shea, who calls Karwath a "team player." O'Shea adds that Karwath has the ability to oversee the coverage of a wide range of stories and "really cares about quality news...I think he will bring a real dedication to their mission."

###

If you had asked me to predict which brand would debut a new logo on its Fall 2017 runway, I wouldn't have guessed Fendi. The brand already has both an iconic logo print and logo hardware that longchamp outlet it has barely capitalized on during the recent resurgence of that look in the accessories market, but for Fall 2017, those things sit alongside the Fendi brand markers we all know and love from the 90s and mulberry replica handbags early 2000s. The new logo hardware is featured prominently on a slew of new flap bags, and it's an open circle with an F resting on its side at the bottom, as though it fell that way. The new replica designer handbags logo's best use by far is as the center of a flower made of leather petals on micro bags and bag charms, several of which made it to the runway alongside the larger bags. Fendi's Zucca logo fabric, which has long been mostly missing from the brand's bags, also figured prominently in several pieces, and now is the perfect time for it to be returning to favor among the label's bag designers.